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Desk Jobs Are Bad For Your Waist And Heart

Desk Jobs Are Bad For Your Waist And Heart

by Julia Samuel on Mar 2 2017 1:00 PM
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Highlights

  • People with desk-bound jobs have bigger waist circumference -- 97 cm compared to 94 cm -- with approximately one BMI unit difference, and an increased risk of heart disease.
  • Bad cholesterol (LDL) increases and good cholesterol (HDL) decreases with each additional hour of sitting from five hours a day.
  • Walking more than 15,000 steps per day was associated with zero risk factors.
Sitting for long hours at work increases the risk of obesity, heart disease and diabetes. A new study shows further evidence for the view that spending too much time sitting down is bad for our health and our waistline.
Research led by Dr William Tigbe, Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick found workers who have a desk-bound job have bigger waists and increased risk of heart disease. It supports advice to sit less and be more active; as much as seven hours a day on your feet, and walking seven miles, may be needed to avoid heart disease.

Calculating Physical Activity

Dr Tigbe kitted out 111 healthy Glaswegian postal workers with activity monitors for seven days; 55 were office workers and 56 delivered post for a living. The study revealed differences between the two groups.

The study participants wore a tiny physical activity and position monitor called activPAL, invented by co-authors from Glasgow Caledonian University, strapped to their thigh for seven days, except during activities that risk it being in contact with water, e.g. bathing or swimming.

They also had their weight, height and blood pressure measured, and provided blood samples. Cardiovascular risks were assessed using the PROCAM risk calculator which takes into account age, sex, family history, blood pressure and metabolic measures.

The study took place between took place between September 2006 and September 2007 and volunteers were recruited from the Royal Mail in Glasgow. Only apparently healthy, non-smokers, with no personal history of myocardial infarction (heart attack), stroke, coronary heart disease, hypertension or diabetes were included. None of the participants was on any lipid, blood pressure or glucose lowering medication.

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Fellow researcher Professor Mike Lean of the University of Glasgow’s School of Medicine said, "In this research we have learned important information, relevant to health in modern working lives, by studying the activity patterns of postal workers, one of the last physically active occupations left in UK."

Risk of Metabolic Syndrome Linked to Desk Jobs

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Metabolic syndrome may not in the strict sense be a “real syndrome”; they are a cluster of conditions that co-exist together and have a common origin. The cluster of conditions include obesity- higher waistline, impaired fasting glucose, elevated triglycerides, low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and hypertension.

Those who had desk jobs had a bigger waist circumference -- 97 cm compared to 94 cm -- and approximately one BMI unit difference. They also had a higher risk of cardiovascular disease -- 2.2% compared to 1.6% over ten years.

The new study suggests that waist circumference increases by two centimetres, and risk of cardiovascular diseases by 0.2%, for every additional hour of sitting on top of five hours.

Furthermore, bad cholesterol (LDL) increases and good cholesterol (HDL) decreases with each additional hour of sitting from five hours a day.

Dr Tigbe said, "Longer time spent in sedentary posture is significantly associated with larger waist circumference, higher triglycerides (fat in the blood) and lower HDL cholesterol, all adding up to worse risk of heart disease.

The levels associated with zero risk factors were walking more than 15,000 steps per day, which is equivalent to walking seven to eight miles, or spending seven hours per day upright.

"Our findings could be used as the basis of new public health targets for sitting, lying, standing and stepping to avoid metabolic risks. However the levels suggested in our research would be very challenging to achieve unless incorporated into people’s occupations."

Bottom line

"Our evolution, to become the human species, did not equip us well to spending all day sitting down. We probably adapted to be healthiest spending seven to eight hours every day on our feet, as hunters or gatherers. "

"Our new research supports that idea. The ’bottom’ line is that if you want to be sure of having no risks of heart disease, you must keep off your bottom!"

Reference
  1. William Tigbe et al., Time spent in sedentary posture is associated with waist circumference and cardiovascular risk, International Journal of Obesity (2017) http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ijo.2017.30.


Source-Medindia


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